Questions? Contact
Tel: (+39) 3335720655
9:00AM -22:00PM
E-mail: info@tusciagarden.com
Claudio and Sabrina welcome you to this website and maybe in the near future, in person, at their home 'Tuscia Garden', the garden of Tuscia.
Our house is a country residence, a mix of Etruscan and traces of tufa civilisation. A few minutes from the lake of Bolsena, from the historical centre of Viterbo and Vitorchiano found in the centre of Tuscia. Our B&B offers accommodation in comfortable rooms equipped with every comfort. Reserved parking, bicycles and barbeque available. An oasis of tranquillity in our garden, between green fields, olive trees, fruit trees, flowers, vegetable garden, play area for children, swimming pool.....
We are in Vitorchiano, in the province of Viterbo, via Strada Avio Secco 3A
A few kilometres to the east is Viterbo, main town of the province, a few kilometres from the borders of Tuscany and Umbria, and about 50 kilometres from the Tyrrhenian Sea.
Our B&B is easily reachable from the A1 highway, E45 motorway and from the state highways Aurelia SS1 and the Cassia SS2.
By rail to Orvieto, Viterbo, Rome or Montalto di Castro then continue by bus.
When at Vitorchiano take the via Alessandro Manzoni, follow the signs 'Campo Sportivo' and 'Cimitero' , into via Nunziatella following the cemetery walls on your left. Carry on, maintaining the asphalt road and after a curve to the right and a slight slope, turn left into via Bandita, then left again at the first dirt road: you are now in Strada Avio Secco.
Follow the road until you find, on your left, another dirt road marked by a milestone, then continue until you reach the B&B Tuscia Garden.
To make it easy for you we have an online map>>>

Bagnoregio became famous because it is the town where Doctor Serafino San Bonaventura was born and it is located between Orvieto and Bolsena, at the boundary of Latium. The Neolitic village was the abode of the Etruscan and Roman civilizations that gave it honour and fame. Some finds seem to testify that the first settlements date back actually to a pre-Etruscan age. In the past it was sacked several times, by the Visigoths, the Goths, the Longobards and the Bysantines. In 600 it was already a bishops seat.

It was called by the writer Bonaventura Tecchi the dying town because of its position; in fact the ancient hamlet is located on a very precarious terrane: located on a tuff shelf, it risks tumbling down because the large clay banks that hold it up, are subject to continuous erosion.